Not logged in
PANGAEA.
Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Bunzel, Dorothea; Milker, Yvonne; Müller-Navarra, Katharina; Arz, Helge Wolfgang; Schmiedl, Gerhard (2021): Organic carbon, XRF scans (Br, Cl, Rb, Zr), and relative grain size distribution, obtained from sediment sequences TB13-1 and GeoHH-FK (south-eastern North Sea) [dataset publication series]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.927307

Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.

RIS CitationBibTeX CitationShow MapGoogle Earth

Abstract:
The sedimentological and geochemical proxy data shown in here were used to evaluate the response of coastal wetlands to 20th-century storm-climate variability at the south-eastern North Sea coastal area. The identification and evaluation of storm-surge layers within well-stratified salt-marsh archives and associated marine influences on the salt marshes was based on mean grain sizes, organic carbon (Corg) and XRF scanning datasets (Br, Cl, Rb and Zr). Local changes in the sedimentary organic matter supply were illustrated by the ln(Br/Cl) ratio, while the Br/Corg ratio represented the marine versus terrestrial organic matter supply, and the ln(Zr/Rb) ratio was used as a proxy for the relative grain-size distribution. It was found that abrupt drops in the ln(Br/Cl) ratio mainly coincided with siliciclastic sand layers, whereas the Br/Corg and ln(Zr/Rb) records revealed an increasing long term trend starting from the mid-century towards today, resembling the observed strengthening in North Sea storminess. Here, we focused on sedimentary salt-marsh sequences from two different salt-marsh sites at the German North Sea coast, both of which were influenced by natural processes but exposed to human activities to different degrees. These sites comprise: I) a more natural developed and un-grazed salt marsh (Bay of Tümlau, Eiderstedt Peninsula), and II) an intensely human-modified and grazed salt marsh (Friedrichskoog, Dithmarschen). Field work was carried out in August 2013 in the Bay of Tümlau (Müller-Navarra et al., 2019; DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2018.12.022) and in November 2016 in Friedrichskoog. The erosional cliffs that fringe both salt marshes at their seaward edges were chosen for sediment recovery. For this purpose, 10–15 plastic U-channels open at one long side were pressed vertically into the previously cleaned erosional cliff face. The recovered sediment sequences are TB13-1 (Bay of Tümlau; Müller-Navarra et al., 2019; DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2018.12.022) and GeoHH-FK (Friedrichskoog). As coastal wetlands are increasingly exposed to rising sea level and associated inundation by storm surges, this study helped to better understand how and to what extent changes in storm-surge climate are translated into the sediment archives and how human-modified salt marshes have so far been able to copy to changing climate conditions over the last century.
Keyword(s):
Anthropogenic Interventions; Climate Oscillations; North Sea; Salt marshes; storminess
Related to:
Bunzel, Dorothea; Milker, Yvonne; Müller-Navarra, Katharina; Arz, Helge Wolfgang; Schmiedl, Gerhard (2021): North Sea salt-marsh archives trace past storminess and climate variability. Global and Planetary Change, 198, 103403, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2020.103403
Coverage:
Median Latitude: 54.203643 * Median Longitude: 8.774357 * South-bound Latitude: 54.043100 * West-bound Longitude: 8.676415 * North-bound Latitude: 54.364186 * East-bound Longitude: 8.872300
Size:
6 datasets

Download Data

Download ZIP file containing all datasets as tab-delimited text — use the following character encoding: